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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 28, 1931. ‘TRADER HORN' TO COME AFTER ‘COSTELLO CASE' {Capitol Complies with Re- quests to Present Afri- can Film Tomorrow CAPITOL LAST TIMES TONIGHT ‘Costello Case’ with TOM MOORE and LOLA LANE Selected Shorts MIDNIGHT SHOW—1.A. M. BUCK JONES in “BRANDED” Also Short Subjects “The Costello Case,” starring Tom Moore and Lola Lane, will be of- fered for the last times tonight at the Oapitol theatre. To comply with numerous re- quests, the management of the playhouse will present “Trader Horn,” the African adventure pho- toplay, tomorrow night. The re- quests came not only from persons who were unable to attend show- ings of the picture last week, but also from persons who, having seen it, wish to see it again. “Branded,” featuring Buck Jones, will be previewed at 1 o'clock to- night, and will be the headline at- traction Friday and Saturday nights and at the meeting of the Mickey Mouse Club Saturday afternoon. Cruze Was in Alaska screen? Don’t miss it! James Cruze, who directed the “Costello Case” has held more land different types of jobs than ROLL CALL TO BE |:my other director in the movies. ANSWERED BY ELK |t various times in his colorful - | career this soldier of fortune has MEMBERS TON[GHT"worked as a mess boy in Manila; later he turned up in Alaska where Members of Juneau Lodge No.|he remained for some i:(ma] wtxxxen 420, Benevolen: and Pro.ective jhe needed a job, he tool he r§: Order of Elks, will observe their one that came ai:ngla:d mr ty,hh“ annual Roll Call Night tonight.,way cbtained a owledge O e Special efforts are being made lo'ordinary man and woman that has get every able-bodied Elk on the served him well in his plc;ure ac- Channel to attend the session,|tivities. Cruze has been &t times la- which is always the most largely borer, farmhand, waiter and cook. attended meeting of the year. | As a movie actor he played lead- e e oo i 1y yop tn ehouy o atten g 4 e the auditorium of Elks’ T:mple. A producer for Paramount and began buffet luncheon will be served in'that series of stupendous produc- the banquet hall. | tions which have given him a high i R international reputation. Filmed in Africa The “Trader Horn" picture, with Harry Carey in the title role, was filmed in ‘Africa. The wild animal life of the “dark continent” is brought in all its natural vividness Bedin, Kodiak; Robert C. Wake-|to the screen. Interwoven with the lin, Seattle; William Hawkins, Sit- | wonders of the jungle and the ka; R. B. Edwards, San Francis-!veldt is a pleasing, delightful love co; Mary K. Butler, Kake. | romance. Alackan In “Branded,” Buck Jones ap- M. G. Clause, N. Ramonoff, Alex ' pears as a cowboy on a ranch west Salaneff, Michael Fink, Juneau; of the Rockies He is involved in a Mr. and Mrs. E. Jones, R. W. F‘er-‘lseries of escapades with a woman, rell, Cordova; Mr. and Mrs. J.\who runs the adjoining ranch, and Smith, Seldovia; Charles La Brash, a band of unscrupulous cowboys. Fairbanks; J. W. Felix, Funter| The supporting cast includes Bay. Ethel Kenyon, Wallace MacDonald, Zynda Philo McCollough and Bob Kort- Helen L. Taft, Goddard Hot man. D. Ross Lederman directed. Springs; Thomas Tilson, H. C. Bry-| e ‘son and William F. Schnabel, Sitka.' OId papers at The Empire. QIIIIIIII|III|IIIIIllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIIlIIIIfiIIIIIlIIIIIIIfI ELECTRIC WASHING MACHINES VOSS AGITATOR AND WRINGER TYPE Price—$75.00 AUTOMATIC DUAL REVERSIBLE AGITATOR AND WRINGER TYPE—$100.00 General Electric AGITATOR AND SPIN DRY TYPE | $135.00 —TOMORROW— By special demand we Wwill show for one night only— “TRADER HORN” —COMING— “NEVER THE TWAIN SHALL MEET” LADIES! LADIES! Did you hear and see the message to you on our AT THE HOTELS L3 . Gasi:neau W. A. Powers, Seward; H. Price, Fairbanks; P. A. Gardner, L. M. Above machines are consrtucted of all metal except wringer rolls and all carry the regular iron-clad service 'guarantee Free Trial in Your Home First Monthly payment plan if desired by the purchaser Alaska Electric Light and Power Company Juneau—Phone 6 Douglas—Phene 18 The Home of Edison Mazda Lamps £ A Drama of East a‘Wesf A drama of the East and the West was unfolded in Los Angeles when Ruth Noble, beautiful young actress, signed a complaint naming Sessue Hayakawa, noted Japanese actor, as the father of her son, = Alexander Hayes, 2, born in 1929 in New York. Miss Noble will seek to set aside the adoption of the boy she says her son by Mr. and Mrs. Haya- . - Photo shows the Hayakawas with Judge Samuel F. Blake in his juvenile court in Los Angeles recently when they formally adopted the baby, sitting on the table, TO WINTER IN STATES ’ BACK FROM ‘KA VISIT Mrs. W. J. Erskine, wife of the Mrs. F. P. Ulrich, Betty Jean Ul- well-known business man of Ko- rich and ard Ulrich returned diak, is a passenger on the steam- to Juneau evening from a visit ship Admiral Evans for the States, to Sitka. where she will spend most of the - e winter. | A new wype of rudder, controlled OB - SO by push buttons on the bridge of a Quartz and placer location nc- ship, do2s away with much signal- tices at The Empire. ling. UP..UP..UP.. SIBERIA HAS HOT WEATHER, MANY INSECTS |Fairbanks M1 Writes| i About Conditions in So- ; viet Gold Fields Living and climatic conditions in the Siberian gold fizlds are describ- {ed by John Hosler, formerly of | Faitbanks, who is employed by the | Soviet Government to instruct Rus- ans in American mining methods. |In a letter wrilten last summer to a friend and printed in the Fair- | News-Mine1, Mr. Hosler | | cat at the camps stomach doesn’t say ‘no, but I sleep in the open unless it's too| wet. In winter when we went onj | sledges it was easy to take a small | |bed roll and a little grub along,' | but that isn't convenient on ho: | back, the mode of travel in sum- | mer. | Weather Like in iairbanks “The weather here is somewhat like that of Fairbanks, 2xcept that it gets hotter and violent thunder- | storms are more frequent. We are in about the same latitude as Sew- ard. Some of the clectrical displays are startling. “This country is simply crawling with bedbugs and I haven't 2stab- lished a rosistance against them | yet. The Russians seem to De im- | mune, but they poison me. In win- ter the cockroaches and bedbugs and houseflies are ten times Great Variety of Berri “The berries are getting ri 0 and we are having our first frosh fruit in eight months. There is a great variety of wild berries but |T don't think that the nicer kinds |are as plentiful as in Alaska. So | far, T have seen cranberrie: c | kleberries, dewberries, red cur) UPr! when my ' [ Secrét's Out MILLUSION WILL e | ENDTONIGHTITS ™ | COLISEUM RUN |“Bad Man” to Be Preview- edat | A. M. and to Show Tomorrow “Illusion,” starring Charles (Buddy) Rogers and Nancy Carroll will be | | presented for the last times to- 5 night at the Ccliseum theatre. “The | Bad Man,” with Walter Huston in| will feature the| the leading role, new program, which will be pre- | viewed at the matinee at 1 o'clock tonight and which will begin show- ing at regular performances to- morrow night. In “Illusion,” the big ences to an interesting romance. Rogers as a magiclan and Miss Carroll as his partner in the act carry their circus training to the- atrical stages. Love finds a way, {but some rough spots have to be ness is reached. Adapted From Stage Play “The Bad Man" 1s an adaotation || |from the stage play of the same ‘| |{name. It abounds in laughs, and, /| |under the guise of a Latin temper- ament, kids the serious-minded Americans to the limit. Huston gives a fine characteriza- Abbcidted Press Photo {tion of the “bad man.” O. P. Heg- The wedding of Mary Astor, film | 8¢, the actress, and Dr. Franklyn Thorpe | Plays the role of the eccentric un- of Hollywood In Yuma, Ariz, last (cle in the wheel chair. Heggic June has become known. | played the same role on the stage. |In the picture he is responsible for : ‘Iully as many laughs as is Huston. raspberries, a bitter blueberry of | Have Romantic Leads which T don’t know the name, and| James Rennie and Dorothy Re- a kind of sweet gooseberry, that is|yier have the romantic leads. Guinn very nice, especially for preservcs."l..nm Boy” Willlams and Marion ————-—-— Byron are the juveniles. Arthur Stone and Johnny Arthur also con- tribute important comedy charac- Chas. ! —adv. ' Buy that fur coat now. Goldstein & Co. « « « 4 hits! THEY'RE MILDER. The best Turkish and Domestic tobacco that money can buy is put into Chesterfield. Chesterfield to- bacco is the finest-textured, the smooth- est and ripest that grows—ripened and sweetened in the sunshine, cured right by the farmer and aged right for two years in wooden hogsheads. Mellow—and wonderfully mild! THEY TASTE BETTER. The¢se mild, smooth tobaccos are put together exactly right. * The aroma of Turkish, the mellow sweetness of Domestic — blended and eross-blended. How it's done is Ch terfield’s secret — but millions knaw how much better it tastes!’ THEY'RE PURE. Everything that goes into Chesterfield is tested by expert chemists. The purest, finest cigarette paper made; a clean, tight-sealed package. “Pure as the water you drink.” THEY SATISFY. The package...neat, clean. The cigarettes ... well-filled. The paper ...pure white. And with your very first puff, you notice they faste better. Pleasing and satisfying — Chesterfields just seem to suit you, right down to the ground. : Four hits—four good things about every Chesterfield cigarette. Remember: They are Milder—Taste Better—Pure—Satisfy. GOOD...they’ve got to be good! ©1931, Lioastt & Myany Tosacco Co. top and| the sawdust ring lend their Influ-| traversed before the goal of happ}-i | Howard Eastbrook's ad: | veteran character actor, COLISEUM LAST TIMES TONIGHT Tiusion a Garamount Qicture with CHARLES (Buddy) ROGERS NANCY CARROLL SED! NUFP Our short Subjects Pathe News Naggls Go Sauth French Kisses Tae Voice of Hollywood OUR BEGULAR MIDNIGHT MATINEE TONIGHT is WALTER HUSTON in “THE BAD MAN” Poors zt 12:30 Show at 1:00 terizations, while Sidney Black- mer gives an excellent perform- ance as the “real villain.” Clarence Badger directed, from tation. To help solve the unémployment problem many residents of Cordova will burn wood, instead of coal, for fuel. The Cordova Times is tak- ing orders for wood. By advertisements in mining and engineering journals, the Fair- banks Chamber of Cdmmerce hopes to bring to the attention of the world the gold thirihg resdurces of Interior Alaska. By also iak- ing known the facilitiés of airplane travel, the Chantber will impress on prospective investors the possi- bility of quick transportation to and from likely mineral flelds. Doomed to wander alone, allen from his kind, is a buffalo bull ‘which was kept at the Alaska Ag- ricultural College and School of Mines near Fairbanks until some time after the main herd had been released near McCarthy. It is said the other bulls have driven him forth from the band and he roams the country by himself, never stray- ing far from the others but never able to join them. Eleven Alaska Agricultural Col- lege and School of Mines students are receiving rent free at the Col- lege dormitories in accordance with the Territorial high school scholar- ship act, reports the Farthest North Collegian. They are Alice Ami, Anchorage; Mary Mikami, Anghor- #ge; Bruce Thomas, Cordova; Iil- een Niemi, Douglas; Ellen Clausen, Pairbanks; Patricla Hering,’ Fair- banks; John Steward, Juneag; n- ald Fowler, Nenana; Margaret. Ul- rich; Nome; Ella Johnstone, Sew- ‘ard;. Louise Meals, Valdez. ' ATTENTION, REBEKARS| ' Perseverance Rebekah Rodge No. 2 A will hold their regular meet- ing tonight at 8 o'clock. Social and refreshments after close of meet- ing. Visiting members welcome. ALPHONSINE CARTER, Secretary. —adv. g = o agveed ELKS' ROLL CALL TONIGHT At 8 o'clock. Visiting brothers welcome. All members requested to be present. ' adv. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. For These | Fall Days A new showing of SWEATERS and SKIRTS Ideal for school or office wear